OldTimeHockey
Active member
i'm a goalie. Have been my whole life. I can't say that Rask was impeded in any way. His lateral movement(The movement needed to make that save) was not hindered. Is that not what the definition of "impede" is?
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How do you "initiate" contact if it's coincidental?Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Strangelove said:barney_rebel said:https://ftw.usatoday.com/2019/04/boston-bruins-goalie-interference-no-call/
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The whining in that article is hilarious considering the penalty disparity and one-sided calls all series.
Whining or not, I still think it was interference. But this just points up the flaw in the rule: it includes a criterion that can't be measured. Whether the goalie could have made the save in the absence of contact from the opposing player is purely speculative. There's no way to know whether Rask could have pulled off an amazing save on Matthews there. Once contact is made, you can't un-do it, obviously.
The one thing that you can see, that is indisputable, is that there was contact made. Then the question becomes whether (in this case) Hyman initiated it. Although there will always be gray areas and disagreements on that point, you at least have some visual evidence to review, rather than operating in a purely hypothetical realm.
Was the call on the ice that Hyman initiated the contact but it was incidental, or that he did not initiate contact?
azzurri63 said:Heroic Shrimp said:Overhead view of the offside positioning leading to the Bruins goal.
https://imgur.com/mBnwlNm
Anyway, I'll take it as a wash for the non-GI Matthews goal.
Looked offside to me as well but you can't just call it a wash. There was no score when Matthews scored and 2-0 when the Boston goal was scored. Auston's goal changes the game. I'm as happy as anyone with the Toronto call but personally think it shouldn't have counted. Regardless if Rask would of stopped it or not. Hyman initiated the contact and impeded Tukka. Wasn't that much contact but still did. I'm not sure what the league can do but it's a crap shoot now with these reviews.
Yes and that's why the "ref" on the ice made the call. The situation room did not make the call according to the panel. They are there to assist and they referred back to the ref and what he called. He thought it was incidental and didn't impede his chance to make the save so good goal. It really is simple. Had Rask lost his balance or something similar, then it for sure wouldn't have counted. This idea that you can't touch a goalie is not true. We've seen it many times this year alone where a goalie was bumped harder then that and the goal still counted. Hyman barely touched him IMO and they made the right call. As for it changing the game? Sure it did but no more then the Bruins having the first 3 PPs and 2 of them being marginal calls at best. B's has their chances, Leafs held the fort.OldTimeHockey said:i'm a goalie. Have been my whole life. I can't say that Rask was impeded in any way. His lateral movement(The movement needed to make that save) was not hindered. Is that not what the definition of "impede" is?
Nik the Trik said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:But this just points up the flaw in the rule: it includes a criterion that can't be measured. Whether the goalie could have made the save in the absence of contact from the opposing player is purely speculative. There's no way to know whether Rask could have pulled off an amazing save on Matthews there. Once contact is made, you can't un-do it, obviously.
That's not a flaw in the rule. The whole theme of replay, and something that's been held in just about every sport is that replay isn't there to make hard decisions. Replay is there to make easy decisions, ones where there's definitive video proof one way or the other. Absent that, the rule says that the call on the ice stands.
OldTimeHockey said:i'm a goalie. Have been my whole life. I can't say that Rask was impeded in any way. His lateral movement(The movement needed to make that save) was not hindered. Is that not what the definition of "impede" is?
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:I was reacting to busta's comment about the rule including something about the contact affecting the goalie's ability to make the save. If that's not actually in the rule, then my comment isn't valid.
Sorry I'm confused. I posted the rule and argued the call was correct based on the rule. Explain how, based on the rulebook, that the call on the ice shouldn't stand? There's no he said she said when it comes to the rulebook. A good lawyer can argue anything. It's about being as close to the truth/objectivity as possible.Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Nik the Trik said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:But this just points up the flaw in the rule: it includes a criterion that can't be measured. Whether the goalie could have made the save in the absence of contact from the opposing player is purely speculative. There's no way to know whether Rask could have pulled off an amazing save on Matthews there. Once contact is made, you can't un-do it, obviously.
That's not a flaw in the rule. The whole theme of replay, and something that's been held in just about every sport is that replay isn't there to make hard decisions. Replay is there to make easy decisions, ones where there's definitive video proof one way or the other. Absent that, the rule says that the call on the ice stands.
I was reacting to busta's comment about the rule including something about the contact affecting the goalie's ability to make the save. If that's not actually in the rule, then my comment isn't valid.
EDIT: I see someone's since quoted the rule, and it references impeding the goalie, so my comment stands.
OldTimeHockey said:i'm a goalie. Have been my whole life. I can't say that Rask was impeded in any way. His lateral movement(The movement needed to make that save) was not hindered. Is that not what the definition of "impede" is?
CarltonTheBear said:Not to sound like I'm belittling anyone doing it, but debating goalie interference calls for more than 5 minutes seems like such a waste of time. The league barely knows what they're doing in this regard, just take the call and go with it.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Incidentally, CTB, don't you have a G6 GDT to make? We are only 21 hours from kickoff.
CarltonTheBear said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Incidentally, CTB, don't you have a G6 GDT to make? We are only 21 hours from kickoff.
I'm not the league, I won't let NBC tell me when to do something.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Again, I'm saying the rule is flawed because it includes a speculative criterion (whether the goalie could have made the save or not) that has no visual evidence. There is no video, nor can there ever be, showing the goalie making or not making the save after the contact *didn't* happen ... precisely because it did. The rule should be based entirely on what can be seen on video, and then make your judgment call. But don't make judgment calls based on things that didn't and can't happen.
disco said:https://twitter.com/LeafsNews/status/1119419636938936322
It's a tough place to stand for two-and-a-half hours without a goal. Super fun place to be for the big moments
Bullfrog said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:Again, I'm saying the rule is flawed because it includes a speculative criterion (whether the goalie could have made the save or not) that has no visual evidence. There is no video, nor can there ever be, showing the goalie making or not making the save after the contact *didn't* happen ... precisely because it did. The rule should be based entirely on what can be seen on video, and then make your judgment call. But don't make judgment calls based on things that didn't and can't happen.
And I'll say that you absolutely can include speculative criterion, as you call it. Evidence isn't proof; but an accumulation of evidence, including an opinion on what would reasonably be expected to occur, can prove something.
Ultimately, I think you're misinterpreting the call. The call last night wasn't "it wasn't goalie interference" or "it was goalie interference"; it was "we didn't have sufficient evidence to conclude precisely, so therefore the call on the ice stands." Since the call on the ice was goal, then it stayed a goal. Had the goal been waived off by the on-ice ref, then it would have remained no goal.
Keep in mind, the situation room only has a couple of minutes to decide; so it needs to be clearly evident that the on-ice call was grossly wrong (for whatever reason, usually being that the ref missed it.)